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Scanning electron microscopy study of dental enamel surface exposed to 35% hydrogen peroxide : alone, with saliva, and with 10% carbamide peroxide

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TLDR
It is demonstrated that, despite changes observed in the enamel surface after bleaching, normal variation in tooth morphology may exceed the effects of 35% hydrogen peroxide and 10% carbamide peroxide on the teeth.
Abstract
Several vital bleaching systems have been introduced in response to the demand in esthetic dentistry The active agents are commonly hydrogen peroxide or carbamide peroxide used in at-home or in-office techniques Although generally positive results have been reported concerning the whitening ability of these agents, concerns still remain as to their effects on dental tissues The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the effect of these bleaching agents on the enamel surface morphology Twelve extracted teeth were used according to three experimental protocols In experimental protocol 1, specimens were treated with 35% hydrogen peroxide In experimental protocol 2, after treatment with 35% hydrogen peroxide the specimens were immersed in natural saliva for 1 week In experimental protocol 3, 35% hydrogen peroxide was applied once and 10% carbamide peroxide was applied for 1 week (12 h of 10% carbamide peroxide alternating with 12 h saliva) Scanning electron microscopy evaluation revealed that regional variation in tooth morphology surface sometimes exceeded the effects of the peroxide used according to experimental protocols Thirty-five percent hydrogen peroxide had a tendency to promote an increase in density of pits Precipitates were observed on specimen surfaces immersed in natural saliva according to protocol 2 A smooth and shiny surface was observed in specimens treated according to protocol 3 The potential relationship between surface alterations and differences in enamel permeability is currently under investigation CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE The differences in various articles written on the subject cannot be reconciled because of the lac of standardization of baseline data regarding factors such as location on the tooth, type of tooth eruption or noneruption, and age in the oral cavity This article demonstrates that, despite changes observed in the enamel surface after bleaching, normal variation in tooth morphology may exceed the effects of 35% hydrogen peroxide and 10% carbamide peroxide on the teeth Hence, considering the morphologic features of the tooth surface, bleaching, as described in thi study, can be considered safe for enamel

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical Evaluation of In-office Dental Bleaching Treatments With and Without the Use of Light-activation Sources

TL;DR: The In-Office dental bleaching treatments of vital teeth with 35% HP did not prove to be more effective when light sources were used and there was no difference in color stability between groups until the sixth month of evaluation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of the effects of peroxide on enamel and dentine properties.

Andrew Joiner
- 01 Dec 2007 - 
TL;DR: The majority of studies indicate that peroxide containing products and solutions have no significant deleterious effects on enamel and dentine surface morphology and chemistry, surface microhardness, subsurface enameland dentine microhardnesses or ultrastructure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficacy, side-effects and patients’ acceptance of different bleaching techniques (OTC, in-office, at-home):

TL;DR: In this paper, the efficacy of three different bleaching techniques with respect to the bleaching times required in order to achieve six grades of whitening in human teeth was compared with a clinical study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eight In-office Tooth Whitening Systems Evaluated In Vivo: A Pilot Study

TL;DR: All eight products with hydrogen peroxide concentrations ranging from 15% to 35% were effective in bleaching teeth and there were 51% and 65% reductions in deltaE, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevention of enamel demineralization after tooth bleaching by bioactive glass incorporated into toothpaste

TL;DR: It is concluded that application of 16% carbamide peroxide causes distinct morphological changes to the enamel surface which vary from mild to severe and should be used after bleaching, in order to repair any damage to the mineral tissue caused by these procedures.
References
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Book

Oral Histology: Development, Structure and Function

Ten Cate, +1 more
TL;DR: This text presents a significant development in the integration of the disciplines of oral histology, physiology, embryology and post-natal growth and development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Histochemical analysis of dental hard tissues following bleaching.

TL;DR: It is concluded that bleaching materials may adversely affect the dental hard tissues and should be used with caution.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of peroxide bleaching on composite to enamel bond strength

TL;DR: Polymerization inhibition of the resin bonding agent is the likely mechanism for the effects of the bleaching on bond strength.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of a vital bleaching technique on enamel surface morphology and the bonding of composite resin to enamel

TL;DR: Although surface changes were observed in the etched enamel, the shear bond strength of composite resin luting cement to etched bleached enamel appeared to be clinically acceptable.
Journal Article

Characterization of enamel exposed to 10% carbamide peroxide bleaching agents.

TL;DR: Scanning electron microscopic evaluation revealed significant surface alterations in enamel topography for slabs treated with the bleaching solutions for 4 weeks, and the most severe alterations were found in slabs exposed to the lower-pH solutions.
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